Trump's reality forces migrants to re -plan her American dream
Trump's reality forces migrants to re -plan her American dream
Francisco Fortín was attacked six months ago in his home in Hondura of Gangs who wore powered. This violent experience moved him and his partner Annie to leave her arms and plagued home country. On the last Sunday, while the wounds heal on his chest, leg and back, they reached Guatemala after wanting to travel to Mexico. However, their plans have changed: "The goal is wherever we can work," said Fortín.
The challenge for migrants
In Guatemala City, CNN interviewed several migrants from Venezuela, Colombia, Honduras, Sierra Leone and Cameroon, who shared Fortín's feelings. Despite the dream of getting to the USA, the policy of Trump administration forces many to rethink their considerations. The increase in deportations and strict entry requirements has steamed the hopes of many migrants.
fear of the unknown
Father Francisco Pellizzari, who heads the Casa del migrant in the Guatemaltec capital, sees the fears of the migrants. "Many are now very scared," he reports. "At the moment they stop trying to get to the United States." Many families who have traveled for months and have survived dangerous routes such as the Darién GAP feel the idea of traveling through Mexico, and being faced with the closed border of the USA, as too much risk.
The effects of Trump
Jean Claude Silva Fuenmayor, a 23-year-old Venezoleer who spent a year in Mexico City to get an appointment with a US immigration officer, says: "Trump has arrived." He describes how the changes in Donald Trump's immigration policy already had profound effects on the first day of his term. The CBP One app, which allowed migrants, lawfully made an appointment for entry, was posted immediately after the inauguration.
The search for security
Manuel Rodriguez, 25, travels with his wife and three small children and tells of the precarious situation in Venezuela, where his family could only eat once a day. So far, their escape to Guatemala has brought them no security, and so the family is hesitating to cross the border to Mexico for fear of cartels. When Waleska Veliz, 26, two of her children protected, she says: "We never sat in prison; we have never committed crimes. We only want to go to the USA to create a better future for our family."
uncertain future
Patrick Songu from Sierra Leone says that a return for him is not possible: "We don't know what we can do." His emotional answer reflects the dilemma of migrants who desperately seek a safe place. Yebit Pryde, a nurse from Cameroon who had to flee from civil wars in his home country, expresses similar concern: “It is really a disaster. America was built up by immigrants.”
The disappointments of the migrants
Orlando Chajchic was deported two weeks before Trump's taking office, and although he lived in the USA for 20 years without papers, he now wants to start again in Guatemala. His words to other migrants are clear: "My advice is, it is better to stay where you are."
The disappointed family from Colombia, consisting of Stephanie Niño, her mother, her younger brother and her three -year -old son, had spent months in Tapachula to get an appointment about the app that has now been set. "We will simply work and try to take care of our children," she says of her return to Colombia. Her mother, Paula Mansipe, describes the loss: “We had many dreams that we could not fulfill.”